Two concurrent exhibitions. Drawing Languages, which occupies the Upper Gallery, explores the complex visual language Jonas has developed in her drawings and the vital importance of the medium to the artist's practice as a whole. In the Lower Gallery, Jonas presents Volcano Saga, 1985/1994, one of the most important installations existing from the artist's oeuvre. "I see Volcano Saga as the beginning of my synthesizing the development of female character, the story as mirror, and the volcanic landscapes as representation of narrative." (J.J.)
Drawing Languages
Wilkinson Gallery is pleased to present two concurrent exhibitions with the internationally acclaimed artist,
Joan Jonas. Drawing Languages, which occupies the Upper Gallery, is the first ever exhibition of Joan
Jonas’ drawings in the UK.
The exhibition explores the complex visual language Jonas has developed in her drawings and the vital
importance of the medium to the artist’s practice as a whole. The exhibition includes drawings from recent
performances; such as those made during the acclaimed performance The Shape, the Scent, the Feel of
Things (commissioned and performed at Dia Beacon, New York in 2006 and 2007 and touring to several other
major international institutions). There are also examples of drawings made independently from the other
elements of Jonas’ practice, like Untitled, 2009, which extends the artist’s ongoing interest in documenting
her own body.
Drawing is an integral and essential component to Jonas’ practice, existing collectively alongside Jonas’
video work, installations and performance, and frequently existing as further explorations on decided themes.
The collection of drawings in the Upper Gallery, in their assortment, display the variety of uses and purposes
drawing has within the artist’s practice.
Jonas’ drawings are visual manifestations of her creative and working process. The drawings function as a
reflexive tool, providing a personal and public examination of the self, the surroundings and the objects of,
say, a performance. The performative drawings act as two-dimensional correlations with the props of the
performance, providing inspiration whilst simultaneously developing the narrative that they initially motivated.
Instead of resigning to a preliminary or testimonial role, Jonas’ drawings animate the performative, creating a
unique and fluctuating vocabulary of symbols and gestures.
The process of drawing establishes a discourse within Jonas’ interdisciplinary practice, linking recurrent
themes across different media. Subsequently, Jonas’ drawings become inscriptions within a wider narrative.
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Volcano Saga 1985/1994
10 Oct - 20 Nov 2011
Wilkinson Gallery is pleased to present two concurrent exhibitions with the internationally acclaimed artist,
Joan Jonas. In the Lower Gallery, Jonas will present Volcano Saga, 1985/1994, one of the most important
installations existing from the artist’s oeuvre.
I see Volcano Saga as the beginning of my synthesizing the development of female character, the story as mirror, and the volcanic landscapes
as representation of narrative. Here, Iceland, was the connection of the psyche to the elements. As in “Wind”, the elements become character.
I chose as my story the 13th Century “Laxdaela Saga”. This story is about a woman who married four times. The book begins with a historical
account, tracing the characters’ ancestry, then continues with the woman, Gundrun, who tells four dreams to a seer who then interprets the
dreams. The second part of the saga involves the actual marriages and the carrying out of the prophecy.
A film crew recorded the landscapes on video. I photographed it, and on returning to New York, I developed a solo performance with video and
slide projections of the different mostly volcanic landscapes that for me represented parts of the story – the four dreams. I finally turned the
live performance into a 30-minute narrative for television broadcast, with Tilda Swinton playing Gundrun and Ron Vawter playing the seer
Gest.
I developed a way of telling the story in video with the foreground shot in the studio against the Icelandtic landscapes as backdrops. Gundrun
tells her dreams to Gest as they sit together in the hot springs – a beautiful blue lagoon with wond, mist, and black volcano rock. Sitting in the
steamy blue made the relationship of the characters in the story erotic. I liked this added level of closeness in relation to our own ideas about
how and when we tell our dreams to others, and how they are interpreted.
To frame the story in the present I began the tape by telling my story of an accident that actually happened, in which my car was blown off the
road by the wind. Otherwise I played a small part. The tape ended with an old couple talking about how the fishing net was invented. By a
woman, probably, they say.
Joan Jonas in Joan Jonas: Performance Video Installation, Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2001
This installation of Volcano Saga, first displayed at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam in 1994, consists of all
the original elements from the performances including the props and two sets of performance drawings,
original slides, the final video work, and a video made from footage of a performance at The Art Institute, San
Fancisco, 1986. The slide projection consists of images of the performances and from the photographs Jonas
made when she first visited Iceland before developing her first performance of Volcano Saga at De Appel,
Amsterdam in 1985.
Volcano Saga, 1985-89 cultivates themes of the re-translation of story telling, the inquiry into female character
and notions of nature and myth, which define Jonas’ performance practice. Jonas often derives the narrative
for her performances from ancient texts and through a process of interpretation re-communicates them into a
contemporary context. Through the translation of established tales, Jonas enters the stories, uncovering
layers, re-imagining and re-interpreting their accompanying myth and symbolism.
Jonas’ discerning approach to performance and video has established her as a pioneer of performance and
video art; she is one of the most important and influential artists to have emerged from the New York art scene
of the 1960s and 1970s. Her work can be situated within this era of exploration and re-definition of the
representation and role of women. Jonas was part of a movement of artists that questioned the pre-
determined definitions of femininity, breaking down myths and cultural ideals through socially and politically
engaged artistic practice, providing a new public space for the interpretation of notions of femininity and
identity.
Joan Jonas (b. 1936, New York City, NY, USA) lives and works in New York. Jonas has become one of the first
female performance, installation and video artists to become formally accepted by the institutional museum
world with major solo exhibitions throughout Europe, the US and globally over the last 25 years. These include
solo exhibitions at Bergen Kunsthalle, Norway (2011); Centre d’art Contemporain, Geneva, Switzerland (2008);
MACBA - Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, Spain (2007); The Renaissance Society, University of
Chicago, USA (2004); Queens Museum of Art (2003); Galerie der Stadt Stuttgart, Germany (2000); Stedelijk
Museum, Amsterdam (1994/1979); PS1 Contemporary Arts Center, New York (1982); Whitechapel Art
Gallery, London (1979). Recent important performances include The Guggenheim Museum, New York (2010),
Dia: Beacon, New York (2005), Tate Modern, London (2004). Jonas is also a professor of visual arts at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). A major new monograph edited by Joan Simon and published by
Gregory R. Miller & Co. will be available in 2012.
Wilkinson Gallery
50-58 Vyner Street, London E2 9DQ
Opening times
Wednesday to Saturday: 11:00 - 18:00
Sunday: 12:00 - 18:00